Browse Items (1185 total)

  • Collection: City of Pullman Image Collection

Three residences designed by Stanley Smith.

U.S. Post Office Pullman, Washington. Workroom from the


east.

Opening day in the 1st National Bank Pullman.

Store fronts on Main Street, Pullman.

A photo showing the Professional Mall in Pullman.

A house in winter with out buildings.

Looking west down Main Street Pullman during the 1972 flood.

A photograph of the main street of Pullman during the flood

of 1972 with City Hall visible to the left in the

background.

A photograph of a mobile home park during the 1972 flood.

A mobile home park after the flood of 1972.

The Pullman High School football field during the 1972

flood.

A photograph taken near Main Street and Stadium Way showing

Pullman during the 1972 flood.

James Klemgard residence and automobile in snow.

After years of neglect, the Washington Hotel (located on

Main Street) was torn down after the Pullman flood of 1972.

A group photo of the Pullman baseball team with players

identified. Bowlin Farr, second row middle with top hat,

was Pullman's first settler and drew up the original town

plat.

J. P. Duthie dealer in produce, flour, feed, Hay, lumber,


posts, coal and wood. Located on W. Grand Pullman.

The Reid Residence.

U.S. Post Office Pullman, Washington. Inside during


construction looking to the north.

A photo showing a section of Main Street with the Washington

Hotel to the right during the 1972 flood.

A faded original photographic print of the Pullman Hotel

with men sitting on the second story.

The Washington Hotel during its decline, not the empty

retail space. After the flood of 1972 the Hotel was torn

down.

U.S. Post Office Pullman, Washington. Entrance vestibule

from the lobby.

The photograph was taken about 1886 from the corner of Grand


Avenue and Olsen Street (now Cougar Plaza) looking East.

Duthie Lumber Shed. East side Grand Pullman.

A man readies his horses for plowing.

A bird's eye view taken from Sunnyside Hill looking east at


Main Street in downtown Pullman and the college. The IOOF


(International Order of Old Fellows) is the right.

Color birds eye view of a part of Pullman.

A reprint of a photo from 1910.

A group portrait of children playing in the snow.

A view down the Palouse River
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